CULTURE OF BANANAS. A CENTRAL AMERICAN INDUSTRY OF CREAT PROPORTIONS. Tho Ranan ltaa the Foremoat Place In the Importation of Tropin Frails to This Country Kar of Cultivation T Wl Rftnrnl to tha ttennna Fanners. As it table delicacy and a fruit now nnlversally sought and consumed , by the American people, says Frank Leslie's Popular Monthly, the banana readily ami easily takes the foremost place of all the rest products of the tropica. It has been but a brief span of years since this dainty and tooth some denizen of Central America be, came generally known, especially to the vast interior cities of the United Btates. But the intimacy which steam navigation has established between this country and the tropics, as well as the rapid transit to points remote from the seaboard, has rendered possible a most stupendous traffic in tho most delicate and perishable fruits. Under snch favorable and en couraging conditions, the banana trade, with almost incredible rapidity, lias increased from a few thousand clusters, eighteen years ago, to the enormous annual importation of over five million bunches. If tradition is to be relied npon, the banana has an ancient and roved lineage from the earliest and mythic epochs of human career. The fruit is also known in the East as "Adam's Fig," which fortifies a claim made of its having furnished, from its great broad leaves, the primeval costumes of our first parents. It is considered the mnsa paradisica of the botanists, and its vast spreading foliage would have easily invited selection as a covering for the nakedness of those early dwellers in the Garden of Eden. Contrary to the prevailing idea, the banana is not indigenous to the West ern hemisphere, as its first roots were brought over to America by a monk in 1516, and was first cultivated in Honduras. It is natural, therefore, rOADINO BANANAS) AT PUERTO CORTEZ, that the first country of its adoption ehould now be the foremost iu its importation, and the unknown eccle siastic, who brought over the first germ, was the pioneer in one of the greatest fruit industries of the new world. The lowlands of all tropical countries are essentially hot, aud while not gracious and inviting as a residence for man, they furnish a very necessary condition of both soil and climate for the development and propagation of the banana. Under such a climatie etate, the vigor and energy of man will decline and he would be unable to properly cultivate tho plant and reap the full benefit of its production, if required to nse as much exertion as is demanded in other latitudes. But nature here, in her great and beneficent economies, comes to his re lief and has provided against the necessity of any hard work and moder ated all demand for any severe mental or physical exercise. The farm work is light, simple and easy, while it can all be confined to the cool hours of morning and evening, leaving the laborer to enjoy his favorite siesta, in some inviting shade, during the heated term. There is a fallacy prevailing that the banana forma the principal and taple food of these natives. This is not only a mistake, but, strange as it may appear, they often warn foreigners, sojourning in the country, to beware of too free an indulgenoe in this species of fruit The natives never eat the banana, -except when it is cooked like the potato, and genorally while it is green. This precaution against eat ing the fruit is not so necessary in temperate climes, where disorders of the intestinal functions are not so dangerous and where the digestion is not weak and low, as in hot countries. The banana grows luxuriantly BANANA FARMEB8 OF 8ULA T ALLEY, HONDURAS. throughout the lowlands of Brit ish and Spanish Honduras, Guate mala, Nicaragua and Costa Rica. A mail supply also oomes from Colombia, Jamaica and Cuba, but the bulk of our supply is harvested in Central America. The most suitable soil is the sandy, alluvial deposits, along the banks of rivers and streams not often subjeot to overflow, and the cultivation is con fined to weeding, thinning out aut molding up." Any deficiency in the "stand" of the crop planted is easily applied by the purohas of alios at cue dollar par huadrad. - Just eight months after this slip is put in the ground it will furnish its first bunch of bananas, and one only requires a machete and a forked stick to gather tho fruit. When ready to cut, the bunch is taken four feet from tho ground, in order to allow the moisture to drain back into the stool of the plant; the forked stick receives the bunch and lets it easily to the ground and the stalk is allowed to decay and enrich the soil. Suckers soon ehoot IW lialMlMi W 1 A BANANA SHED, out from the stump and all but two are cut away and planted elsewhere. One average bunch will stand about four feet in height, weigh ninety pounds, have twelve handles or clusters and contain 180 bananas. An acre will produce about 2"0 bunches during the second year after planting, aud an average yield for the future of 300 bunches per aunnm. The price of the fruit fluctuates slight ly during the season, but averages at the steamer from twenty to thirty cents ?ier bunch, and to the frugal and care ul farmer this represents a profit of thirty-five or forty per cent. This may sound extravagaut, if not incredible, to onr American farmers, but it is nevertheless a fact, which can be sub stantiated by a number of our citizens, who have settled in this country and are making small fortunes. Laud can be obtained very cheap, and to clear it up and prepare the first crop has been computed to cost nine dollars per acre. The natives care but little for any more than their immediate neces sities, aud consequently are mostly the laborers of numerous enterprising foreigners, who constitute the bulk of the banana farmers. The opening of new markets and the greatly increased demand for the fruit has stimulated the clearing and opening of many new and extended farms during the post three or four years. There is always a certain and sure sale for the product, as each farmer, at the very beginning of the'planting season, can contract for the sale of his entire crop to any of the MS?" NATIVE MESTIZO LABORERS. competing lines of steamers which regu larly visit the coast. If he chooses this course the only thing that should concern him is proper attention to make the yield as great as possible, having no uneasiness as to bis market. The competition for the business has be come very strong and many additional steamers and new markets have been created, as a stimulus and encourage ment to increased production. Tbe banana trade of British Hon duras is not very extended, and its product is mostly obtained from Staun Creek, .Funta Gorda aud Monkey River in the lower part of the province. Nearly all of the fruit business of this colony, including oocoanuts, is ab sorbed by New Orleans. Tha fruit business of Guatemala is exclusively confined to tha Atlantio side ana to tbe ports of Livingston, Isabel and Tort Barios. Although the trade has been - comparatively small a new impetus will Je given it by tbe oonpletioa of the railway to Port Barios, as this will traverse the Mon tagna Valley, one of the richest sec tions of Central America. The trade of Honduras, confined also to the Atlantio side, is the most extended of all the tropical countries. Her leading banana ports are Puerto Cortes!, Ceiba and the islands of Ut'l la and Ruatan, although some frnit is also taken from Tela, Truxillo, Irione and Oracios a Dios. The bulk of the imports, however, come through NICARAGUA. ruerto Cortez, the terminus of the Honduras Railroad, which traverses tbe great Rule and I'llua valleys for a distance of forty miles. This section is exhibiting the greatest development of the banana industry to be observed in Central America, and with im proved railroad facilities is destined to become one of the greatest fruit de pots of the world. The business of Nicaragua is con fined to the ports of Bluetlelds, Grey town and Tear) Lagoon, and practi cally the entire product is shipped to New Orleans or Mobile. Renewed in terest in the industry is manifest throughout this section, and fresh lands are being opened to banana cul tivation along the Rama and Escon dido Rivers. The banana trade of Costa Rica, confined exclusively to Tort Limon, shows the most rapid growth of any other Central American country. Its OOLD B1IICK, ONE-THIUD product, raised mostly in the canton of Matina, has grown from an output of a few thousand clusters in 1882 to 1,000,000 bunches for the present year. According to the statement of Consul Dclgado, at New York, that city alone has received about 700,000 bunches during 1896,- while the re ceipts at New Orleans from Costa Rica have been fully as much, if not in excess of that figure. Iom calcu lations made, on reliable statistics, the approximate banana production of Central America for the present year is as follows: Bunches. British Honduras MiS.OOO Spanish Honduras 1,750,000 Guatemala 4S0.000 Nicaragua 600,000 Costa ltica 1,600,000 Total. ...4,725,000 This is considered a very conserva tive estimate, and if the amount of local consumption, rejections and loss from over-mature fruit is considered, the product will easily aggregate over five million bunches. Add to this the amount of the fruit brought from Ja maica, Colombia, Cuba and other sources, and the whole will approxi mate very close to eight million bunches. Engaged directly in this business are about thirty steamers and an equal number of sailing vessels, while double that number are engaged in the traffio in connection with other products of the tropics. How to Keep Flowers tresh. - Some people are not aware that flowers will keep fresh muoh longer if the stems are set in a dish of sand than if they are plunged simply into water. Put the flowers into a vase as usual; then carefully sift into the vase by means of a funnel sufficient sand to fill it nearly to the top, shaking it so that the sand will settle down among the items. Gradually add water un til it atauds a very little above the top of the sand, and replenish the water as often as needed. - An ordinanee prohibiting screens in saloons baa been adopted In Cleveland, Ohio. HEN KILLS A "RATTLER." A Fierce Duel In Which "Biddy" Whipped 'the Snake. Attorney Ben T. Hardin, of Kansas City, Mo., is never happier than when be has a gamecock under each arm. He is an enthusiastic breeder of fowls, and Jl hex wnira A rattles are. raises nothing but game chickens. Occasionally the chickens raise trou ble. They raised a rumpus about a week ago, and as a result Mr. Hardin was treated to the novel sight of a fierce duel between a hen and a rattlesnake. The lawyer was proudly watching his pets wander towards the bushes at the further end of the yard, when sud denly one of the hens gave a cry of alarm. It was too late. The seven rattles on the tail of a big snake sounded, and an instant later the fowl was struck. A hen by her side, In stead of running away, got her fight lug blood up, saw a chance for a good battle and pitched in. She fonght scientifically, and proved that she knew a good deal about the vital spots of a snake. She made a few passes, dodg ing for advantage, and before the rep tile realized its danger one fierce peck at the back of its head ended its exist ence. The hen that was bitten by the snake died in agony. ' COLD BRICK WORTH $72,000; A Solid Cone of the Prerlona Metal, One Third Actual "lie, a Tlctared. A solid cone of gold was received in New York recently by the agency of tha Bnnk of Montreal, from the Caribou Hydraulic Mining Company, of British Columbia. The chunk was the result of about two months' work ACTUAL 8IZE, WORT1I 172,000. at the mine, which is largely owned by officials of the Canadian Pacifio Rail way Company. The precious mass was taken to the United States Assay Office. It weighed 4149.00 ounces Troy. In appearanoe it resembled a sugar cone, save that the sides were more rounded and the apex not so pronounced. It measured nine inches at the base, was ten inches high, and is worth $72,000. Tha Latest In Woman's Coiffure. This new movable strip fringe is a boon to wheelwomen and dwellers by the sea. It is an English idea not yet NEW "TRANSFORMED" COIFFUBC. seen here. It is fixed to a eingle strand easily concealed among the front looks aud does not beat the head. The Discoverer of Anmtheala, The credit for first using aniesthet ios, which has done so muoh to lessen human pain, must be shared by three men; Wells, of Hartford, Conn., who employed nitrous oxide in 1844; Mor ton, of Boston, who tried ether suc cessfully in 1846, and Sir J. Y. Simp son, of Edinburg, who introduced chloroform a year later. Texas ia to tax cigarette dealers to tha tune or iqoo year, ... BLAZERS AND BOLEROS, FEATURES OF WOMAN'S DRESS THAT ARE AS POPULAR A3 EVER. Simple and Stylish Design of a Mate That Is Suitable For Klther Ladles or Mia H and some Bolero of White Omandjr and Moire Unlqaely Decorated Nothing seems to hold popular favor more completely than the blazer, writes May Manton. The style shown in the illustration is both simple and ladies' and missis' blazer. stylish. The pattern is given for misses as well as ladies, there being absolutely no difference in cut between those worn by the growing girls and HANDSOME AND their mammas. The fronts are with out darts and there are straight backs, which are laid in underlying plaits at the waist line, side forms and under arm gores by means of which the fit ting is effected. The sleeves are two seamed and show the regulation slight fullness at the top. The fronts are reversed to form lapels which meet the rolling coat collar in uneven notches. As shown, the material is light weight covert cloth, but all-wool stuffs as well as pique, linen, duck, crash and cotton cheviot are well suited to the style. Whatever the material, the finish is an important point, and differs according as the material is washable or is not. All goods chased nnder the latter bead are made unlined, the seams being neatly bound and both collar and revers simply self-faced without stiffening. Wool goods ot all sorts call for a lining of taffetas and for an interlining of tailor'a canvas in both collar and revers, as well as a two-inch facing round the lower edge and at the wrist of each sleeve. When so treated the blazer takes that set that nothing else can give, and should be quite as stylish as though made by an expert. The revers and collar are invariably faced with the material, but the facing maybe either the severe maohine stitch ing or an applique of narrow braid as indicated. To make this blazer for a lady in the medium size will require two and one-quarter yards of furty-four-inch material. Ladles' Bolero. The models illustrated in the large engraving, and described by May Manton, show two different styles of the ever popular bolero. No. 1 is composed of white organdy tucked in clusters or groups that are joined by bands of insertion. The garment is eimply adjusted by shoulder and under arm seams. The back shows a straight lower edge while tbe fronts are shaped in rounding outline. The collar is a close band overlaid with violet ribbon stylishly bowed at the centre-back. To tbe npper 'edge of the collar is sewed a full divided ruohe of lace pro viding a aoft and becoming fulness. Epaulette frills bordered with ruffle of laee, headed by a single band of in sertion, droops over the sleeves of the bodioe which ia composed of white spotted muslin over violet batiste. No. 9 is carried out in white mofrs oniquely decorated with black satin ribbon. It ia worn over a gown of barege showing white and royal bine. The jacket is sufficiently short to per mit of the wearing of a deep girdle. The back is slashed after the manner of the latest models and is joined by shonlder and nnder-arm seams to the fronts that olose at the neck, gradual ly separating below this point to show the full waist beneath. The collar and epaulettes are similar to those seen in No. 1. Jaunty little boleros of this description can be made of silk, satin, velvet, moire velours, canvas and other fashionable weaves, and decorated ac cording to individual taste. Among the suitable trimmings are ribbon ap plied in straight bands, ruffles or nar row quillings, lace, bands of insertion. .or heavy guimpe lace applique over 'brilliant hued satiu. Spangles and sequins are frequently seen npon black satin, the effect being exceeding ly beautiful. It requires bnt the merest trifle of material to make either one of these charming little boleros that can be made either to match the waist over which it is worn or of contrasting fabric. Remnants can be picked np at a trifling cost, making it within the reach of every woman to possess a stylish little accessory that will do wonders in smartening np last .sea son's gowns. To make either bolero for a lady in the medium size will require one and seventh-eighths yards of twenty-two-inch material. Kent end I'sefnl Wrapper, A neat and nsefnl gown is here) shown composed of polka-dot percale, trimmed with bands of insertion. The npper portion consists of a short yoke that is simply adjusted by shoulder seams, and has a straight lower edge. The full portion has side seams, and is gathered at the upper edge and joined to the yoke, a single band of insertion STYLISH BOLEROS. concealing the seam. The'sleeves are one-seamed and .sufficiently loose to permit of perfect freedom of the arms, a feature necessary in gowns of this description. Gathers adjust the ful ness of the sleeves at the upper and lower edges, and a single band of in sertion oompletes the wrists. , Tha neck finishes with a neat rolling collar. Percale, dimity, gingham, lawn, batiste and all washable fabrics are adapted to the mode, or the garment can be made of either French or outing-flannel, in which instance it can LADIES' MOTHER HUBBARD W BAP PEE. be used as a nightdress when travel ing. Ladies contemplating a aea voy age will find gowns of this description exceedingly comfortable and praetioa- ble. To make this wrapper (or a lady in the medium size will require eight yards of thirty-six-inch material. Japan, has ordered four thirty-one-knot torpedo boat destroyers of tha Yarrows, of England.